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2009 Course Handbook

ANTH106: Drugs Across Cultures

This unit will examine the production, exchange, and consumption of drugs in non-Western and Western societies with special reference to their cultural meanings and their social functions (including their role in establishing and reproducing relations of inequality and equality, and the politics of their use, prohibition of production and consumption, financing of political and criminal conflict).

Topics will include the international traffic in opium/ heroin and cocaine, in the Golden Triangle of mainland South-East Asia and in South America, the way it intermeshes with regional politics and local tribal, peasant and commercial systems of production and exchange; the social history of drugs in the West (US, UK and Australia); youth culture and drugs in the West; AIDS and intravenous drug use; addiction and treatment; drugs and the law; hallucinogens and shamanism in relation to religious experience and healing; anthropological studies of drinking (including the role of alcohol in Aboriginal communities in Australia), and the global political economy of pharmaceuticals, particularly contraceptives and antiretrovirals, in the era of AIDS.

Credit Points:3
Contact Hours:3
When Offered: D1 - Day; Offered in the first half-year
X1 - External study; Offered in the first half-year (On Campus session: No session)
Staff Contact: Dr Lisa Wynn
Prerequisites:

Corequisites:

NCCWs:

Unit Designations: --
Assessed As: Graded
Offered By:

Department of Anthropology

Timetable Information

For unit timetable information please visit the Timetables@Macquarie Website.

Recent Updates

17 Oct 2008 - EDUC80P

Program title amended